Interlock diagram

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An interlock diagram is a real or imagined diagram that plots the actual interactions, physical, political, social, environmental between all entities within human societies. Each node is a specific activity such as a power station, or a policy such as controlled rent. Ideally each node should be owned by a practitioner with relevant experience and knowledge both tacit knowledge and explicit.

The diagram can be started by one or more such experts and can grow to plot all interactions, and stimulate discussions about the various knock on effects and there amelioration.

By having an expert at each node, these can feed policy insight directly into government or other management machinery, to keep the organisation on track and to achieve its goals.

Lateral communication occurs between these experts, largely mapping the interactions, which facilitates the transfer of relevant information and tacit knowledge. This defeats the Relevance Paradox.

To a very large extent, Wikipedia is a gigantic self assembling interlock diagram, and the participants are carrying out interlock research.

[edit] References

Many of the references listed below are on: http://lateralaccessnetworks.wikispaces.com/ Lateral access]

The paper reviews developments in the U .S .A. & U .K . in recent years, progressing beyond network analysis to explore the structure & use of networks. The paper seeks to address questions of how to construct multi-actor policy structures, & build networks for particular purposes. Contributory concepts explored included the 'Reticulist', the 'Leader/Co- ordinator', the 'Segmented Polycephalous Network' & the 'Information Routing Group' in "CONNECTIONS", Sunbelt Social Network Conference, World Congress of Sociology, American Sociological Association, Volume IX, Nos. 2-3, Winter, 1986

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